A migrant woman sits on a camp bed and checks her belongings at an emergency refugee shelter at a sports hall in Berlin, Friday, Oct. 23, 2015. Up to 1000 people can be housed in two sports halls of this shelter for their first days in Germany, before they get officially registered and distributed to other accommodations. less

A migrant woman sits on a camp bed and checks her belongings at an emergency refugee shelter at a sports hall in Berlin, Friday, Oct. 23, 2015. Up to 1000 people can be housed in two sports halls of this ... more

Photo: AP Photo/Markus Schreiber

Photo: AP Photo/Markus Schreiber

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A migrant woman sits on a camp bed and checks her belongings at an emergency refugee shelter at a sports hall in Berlin, Friday, Oct. 23, 2015. Up to 1000 people can be housed in two sports halls of this shelter for their first days in Germany, before they get officially registered and distributed to other accommodations. less

A migrant woman sits on a camp bed and checks her belongings at an emergency refugee shelter at a sports hall in Berlin, Friday, Oct. 23, 2015. Up to 1000 people can be housed in two sports halls of this ... more

The images of Germans welcoming refugees from Syria, Iraq and elsewhere at a Munich train station last month are still omnipresent. Increasingly, however, Germans who are opposed to more immigration are becoming more vocal.

Pegida, an eastern German anti-Islam movement that was believed to have disappeared, is now now attracting more than 10,000 weekly protesters. Meanwhile, refugee reception centers are being targeted by right-wing extremists and locals in arson attacks.

Now, one German town has decided to train refugees as firefighters, partly so that they can extinguish the fires themselves if their own accommodation centers are attacked.

The story was first reported by German radio station Deutschlandfunk. It quoted instructors explaining firefighting techniques to trainees, such as using fire extinguishers, rather than water, to put out a blaze started by a Molotov cocktail.

The firefighter training appears to be confined to the eastern German city of Wittstock for now. Participation in the courses is voluntary, and, according to the Deutschlandfunk report, refugees themselves had asked to be trained as firefighters.

So far this year, there have been more attacks on refugees in the less-populated eastern part of Germany than in the west, as the map below shows, though there are fewer refugees in the east.

As WorldViews explained in a previous post, the significant differences between eastern and western German attitudes toward refugees are not accidental.

Sixty percent of Germany’s unemployed do not fall below the poverty threshold, whereas about 3 million employed do. The number of people who are poor despite having a job has increased by 25 percent from 2008 until 2013. In other words: For some, it is financially more beneficial to be unemployed in Germany than to have a job.

Most reported attacks and other acts of violence have originated in the east, despite the fact that only about one-fifth of the country’s total population lives there.